Award-Winning GMAT Prep in St. Louis

Everything you need to crush the GMAT in St. Louis, MO. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.

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GMAT Prep Classes

GMAT 4 Week Prep ClassShort-term classLive

GMAT 4 Week Prep Class

The GMAT Group Class is designed to prepare students to take the GMAT by equipping them with skills and test-taking strategies to improve their score. The course will cover content and strategies for critical reading, verbal reasoning, and analytical thinking. Upon completion of the course, students should have an understanding of the exam structure, scoring methodology, section specific test-taking strategies, and the ability to identify and handle difficult or tricky questions.

Sat, Apr 181hr 30min
Test PrepGMAT
GMAT 8-Week Prep ClassSemester classLive

GMAT 8-Week Prep Class

The GMAT Group Class is designed to prepare students to take the GMAT by equipping them with skills and test-taking strategies to improve their score. The course will cover content and strategies for verbal, quantitative, integrative reasoning and analytical writing. Upon completion of the course students should have an understanding of the exam structure, scoring methodology, section specific test-taking strategies, and the ability to identify and handle difficult or tricky questions.

Sun, Apr 191hr 30min
Test PrepGMAT

Top-Rated GMAT Prep Instructors in St. Louis

Caroline

Masters in Business Administration, Business Administration and Management
14+ years of tutoring

Caroline's path from a Magna Cum Laude engineering degree at Washington University to MIT Sloan's MBA program gives her an unusually sharp read on what the GMAT actually demands: the ability to switch...

Education & Certificates

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Masters in Business Administration, Business Administration and Management

Washington University in St. Louis

Undergraduate degree

SAT Scores

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Allen

B.A. in an interdisciplinary major focused on economics and political science
1+ years of tutoring

Yale's Ethics, Politics, and Economics program trains students to dissect arguments at the structural level — exactly the analytical instinct the GMAT Verbal section rewards on Critical Reasoning and ...

Education & Certificates

Yale University

B.A. in an interdisciplinary major focused on economics and political science

SAT Scores

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Hari

Masters, MBA (Finance and Management)
1+ years of tutoring

An MBA in Finance and Management gives Hari a practical lens on the GMAT's toughest Quantitative traps — he coaches students to recognize when a problem-solving question is really a ratio or rate disg...

Education & Certificates

University of South Florida-Main Campus

Masters, MBA (Finance and Management)

Washington University in St. Louis

Bachelors

SAT Scores

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Albert

Masters in Business Administration
9+ years of tutoring

Data Sufficiency is the GMAT question type that most separates high scorers from average ones — and it requires a reasoning process, not a math process. Albert, who holds an MBA with a Finance concent...

Education & Certificates

University of California Los Angeles

Masters in Business Administration

Wuhan University

Bachelor in Arts, Broadcast Journalism

Jason

Bachelor in Business Administration
6+ years of tutoring

Business school admissions hinge on GMAT scores, and Jason knows that terrain firsthand — as an incoming MBA student at Michigan Ross, he understands exactly what adcoms expect and where test-takers l...

Education & Certificates

Washington University in St. Louis

Bachelor in Business Administration

Evan

Current Grad Student, Statistics
9+ years of tutoring

Evan's graduate-level statistics training at Harvard gives him an unusually precise diagnostic lens on where GMAT Quantitative scores stall — he identifies whether a student's Data Sufficiency errors ...

Education & Certificates

Harvard University

Bachelor in Arts, Sociology

Harvard University

Current Grad Student, Statistics

ACT Scores

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Jason

Masters in Business Administration, Finance
6+ years of tutoring

Few GMAT coaches bring real-world application to the Integrated Reasoning and Analytical Writing sections the way Jason does — his background as a Goldman Sachs trader and his Columbia MBA training me...

Education & Certificates

Columbia University in the City of New York

Masters in Business Administration, Finance

Cornell University

Bachelor of Science in Applied Economics (focus in finance)

SAT Scores

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John

Bachelor of Fine Arts, English/Drama
16+ years of tutoring

Reading comprehension under pressure is one of the GMAT Verbal section's most underrated challenges — dense argument passages require a reading strategy built for speed and precision, not thorough lit...

Education & Certificates

University of St Thomas

Bachelor of Fine Arts, English/Drama

American Academy of Dramatic Arts

Associates, Acting

ACT Scores

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Professor

Bachelor of Science, Applied Mathematics
5+ years of tutoring

Teaching applied mathematics at six universities — including USC, Caltech, and UCLA, where he graduated Magna Cum Laude with Phi Beta Kappa honors — gives Professor Florence an unusually sharp eye for...

Education & Certificates

University of California Los Angeles

Bachelor of Science, Applied Mathematics

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Non Degree Doctorals, Engineering Design

Aaron

Bachelor of Science, Organizational Behavior Studies
8+ years of tutoring

Aaron's background in Organizational Behavior from Vanderbilt gives him an unusual angle on GMAT prep: he coaches the Analytical Writing Assessment as a structured argument-critique exercise, teaching...

Education & Certificates

Vanderbilt University

Bachelor of Science, Organizational Behavior Studies

ACT Scores

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Frequently Asked Questions

Pacing is one of the most common challenges GMAT test-takers face, especially on the Quantitative and Verbal sections where you have roughly 1.5-2 minutes per question. Tutors can help you develop section-specific timing strategies, such as identifying which question types to tackle first, recognizing when to guess strategically rather than spending 3+ minutes on a single problem, and using practice tests to calibrate your pace. The key is practicing with realistic timing constraints repeatedly so that time management becomes automatic on test day.

The Quantitative section challenges many test-takers because it requires both content knowledge (algebra, geometry, word problems) and strategic problem-solving under pressure. The Reading Comprehension portion of the Verbal section is also difficult because it demands active reading and the ability to distinguish between what the passage explicitly states versus what can be inferred. Data Insights (formerly Integrated Reasoning) trips up students who aren't comfortable switching between different data formats quickly. A tutor can diagnose which specific areas—whether it's algebra fundamentals, reading strategy, or data interpretation—are holding you back and create a targeted plan.

The GMAT uses adaptive testing, meaning the difficulty of questions adjusts based on your performance, which can feel disorienting if you're used to traditional tests. You'll encounter unique question types like Data Sufficiency (where you evaluate whether given information is enough to answer a question, rather than solving it outright) and Multi-Source Reasoning (where you navigate tabs of information). These formats reward strategic thinking and test-taking skills as much as content knowledge. Tutors can teach you how to decode these formats, avoid common traps, and develop a systematic approach to each question type.

Score improvement depends on your starting point and study commitment. Students starting in the 400-500 range often see 80-150 point improvements with focused tutoring and consistent practice, while those already scoring 650+ may gain 30-80 points as the test becomes harder to improve at higher levels. Most students benefit from 8-12 weeks of tutoring combined with independent practice, including multiple full-length practice tests. Your tutor will help you set realistic goals based on your target school's average scores and identify which sections offer the most point-gain potential for your skill set.

Practice tests are essential—they're the only way to experience the adaptive testing format, build stamina for the 3.5-hour exam, and get an accurate score estimate. You should take full-length, timed practice tests under realistic conditions (no interruptions, same time of day as your test date if possible) roughly every 1-2 weeks once you've built foundational knowledge. The real value comes from reviewing your practice tests: analyzing which question types you missed, understanding why you made errors (careless mistake vs. knowledge gap vs. timing pressure), and adjusting your strategy accordingly. Tutors help you extract maximum learning from each practice test rather than just taking them passively.

GMAT Reading Comprehension passages are dense and often written in formal, academic language about unfamiliar topics (science, history, business). The test rewards active reading—annotating the main idea, author's tone, and logical structure—rather than trying to remember every detail. Many students struggle because they read too slowly (trying to understand everything) or too quickly (missing nuance). Tutors teach strategic reading techniques like identifying the passage's argument in the first minute, then using that roadmap to answer questions efficiently. They also help you recognize common wrong answer traps, like choices that are true but don't answer the specific question asked.

Test anxiety on the GMAT often stems from feeling unprepared for the adaptive format or from past standardized test experiences. Building confidence requires two things: actual skill development (so you know you can handle the questions) and mental strategies for test day. Tutors help with the first part by ensuring you've mastered content and practiced extensively under timed conditions. For the second part, they can teach you how to manage the psychological pressure—techniques like taking a deep breath when you hit a hard question, remembering that everyone gets questions wrong on the GMAT, and having a plan for when to guess and move on. Mock tests in a tutoring session also simulate test conditions and reduce the fear of the unknown.

Beyond content expertise in math, grammar, and reading, a strong GMAT tutor understands the test's unique architecture—the adaptive algorithm, the specific reasoning required for Data Sufficiency, and how to teach strategic thinking rather than just formulas. They should be able to diagnose whether your errors are due to misunderstanding concepts, misreading questions, or poor time management, then address the root cause. Great GMAT tutors also stay current with test changes (the GMAT introduced Data Insights in 2024), teach you how to learn from mistakes, and help you build the mental resilience needed for a challenging, multi-hour exam. They balance pushing you to improve with helping you stay confident and motivated throughout your prep.

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